And with so little powder capacity.
Well I cannot help it if Paul Mauser got it right
Not long after acquiring this Husqvarna model 46 rifle I attended our clubs monthly shoot which that month was on the military Ash Complex and we were put on Ash #3 I seem to recall which is a 600 yard range. Being a newly acquired rifle I had several different loads to try out but the others decided they wanted to shoot at 200 & 300 yards for some reason not ideal for a first try out but it was what I was limped with so we set up at 200 yards. Targets were also not ideal being Figure 11 the military charging man so I got a 2" square of white patches stuck in the centre to give a positive aiming point. The rifle at that time had a small Meopta 3x scope fitted and I had loads with these bullets to try:-
Hand swaged 180 grn RN (from Norman Clark of Rugby who I obtained the rifle from)
195 grn S&B flat points
232 grn Norma semi spitzers
246 grn RWS Cone Points
270 Grn Speer
286 grn S&B RN
Without looking at my notes I cannot recall off hand what powders and charges were used but I do know there were several different powders used. The surprise came when I shot them all using the same POA and ALL the bullets made one composite group of around 6"
and seeing how there was over 100 grains of weight difference from lightest to heaviest this surprised me but not as much as the results from 300 yards.
After moving back to the 300 yards position, Ash is a Gallery range, I again shot all of the weights on the same target, we had markers so the fall of each shot was marked
and all except the 286 gran bullet made a slightly larger composite group the 286 grain bullet dropped out the bottom by about 3" the rest made a group of around 8" just a bit lower on the target as I used the same POA as I recall.
One of the best bullets proved to be the RWS 246 grain Cone Point but these are almost impossible to get here and in fact I picked these up on a day trip to France the 9.3mm being popular for Boar shooting
there. As I had managed to acquire a bulk lot of the Norma 232 grain bullets ( well I was told they are Norma bullets but they came in a brown card unmarked box holding around 400+ it is what I have been working with even though it has not shown as good accuracy potential in my rifle as the RWS Cone Point but we must work with what we have. In all honesty I was expecting the bullets to drop almost to the bottom of the target at 300 yards this beign a mild mannered cartridge with a sedate velocity however it seems to perform a lot better than one would think it should.
Now my particular rifle has very deep grooves, they measure 0.008" deep which makes groove size of the bore 0.371" and not 0.366" which is claimed to be the norm but is 0.355" across the lands so I thought to try some paper patched bullets and used a couple of Lyman moulds on 0.358" diameter with mixed results and it needs more experimenting and varying the lead hardness. Im my little experiment I did achieve 2100fps with a pure lead bullet of 243 grains however another powder than that used would proove benificial.
He...He
I see swampy is at it again
The Remington is more accurate, the receiver is machined from solid steel, and I think it's more attractive.
Ahh the Remington 700 uses a bit of pipe or tube if you like and that's more attractive?
and that's for cheapness and ease of manufacture
Edit to correct miss-spelling